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4 i \ . - y { cr 8 AY; OOTOBER 14.1918 ° MEMBERS ARE ALL INDICTED Dozen ‘True Bills Found by Em- mons. County Grand ‘Jury Late Saturday. TRIALS BEGUN ‘AT LINTON | Cecil Pennington Held on Four | Counts for Killing of Mrs.~ E. L. Perras: | Linton, .N. D., October 14.—The arraignment of a dozen — prominent Hazelton busiriess men, farmers of the | adjacent country ‘and youths, indicted by the Emmons -County ¢ 1) jury} for murder in the first degree, riot. | rout or unlawful: assemblage., and in one instance for all of these, w: gun in the Emmons count court t morning, Judge W, Hing. lictments, annuounced night, grow out of the killin; of Mr L.Per a well known Haz elton woman by member, of an al- Jeged mob which: came to her ‘home one late night several weeks ago, seek her ‘yon in law, W. W. Dougherty, y had Deen accused of wheat hourding. Those | indicted are as follows: Cecil Pennington, “Hazelton dray- man,"murdet‘in the first degree, riot and rout. ‘ Be eG Louis Torkelson, farmer; * Charles manager Victoria’ Elevator, Farry | Hanson and H. L. Ellithorpe, Hazel- ton village marshal, riot, rout and un- lawful assembly. ) Bert Hartman, Hazelton, unlawful assembly. Vernon Scott, Clyde Babcock, Sam Wright, Cliff Wright. Harry Kremer, John unde and Herbert Dawson, un- lawfut assembly. - - . All ‘of those indicted were charged with having been members-of the mob from. which the shot was fired that. killed Mrs. Perras. Cecil Pennington is charged with having actually fired the shot. His attorney, Charles Coy- entry, announced this morning that a motion would be made for a change of venue. Th charges of riot and rout constitute felonied «under North Da-' kota’s statutes, while unlawful assem- bly is a misdemeanor. All of the men named. have been ar- rested and arraigned. There is one other. principal defendant, indicted for riot, rout and unlawful assembly, who hag not-yet been arrested, and whose naime has ‘not beeti Made public. The grand: jury, which is still in séssion, has also indicted: Meuntz, the!! Hagite \ rout and bootlegging, blindpigging and con/ tempt of court in the violation of a temporary injunction, Mr. Meuntz has announced that he will ask a change of venue. Attorney General Langer is assisting State’s Attorney Scott Cameron in the prosecution. BUY Wo a. REPRESENTATIVE MEN WILL DEVISE CAR CIRCULATION Chairman S. Js Aandahl Given Place on Important. Dis- tribution Board. Secretary J. H. Calderhead» today was advised of the. personnel of the committee named by the northwestern state railway commissions’ in confer- ence with the interstate commerce commission at Chicago last week to formulate improved car distribution rules. as especially affec‘ing the handl- ing of wheat. This committee's rec- ommendations. will be submitted to a second conference to be, held in Chi- The membership ago in November. lis as follows: V. E. Wilson, Nebraska state rail- way commissioner; Charles F. Foley, Kansas public utilities commission; S. J. Aandahl, chairman North Dakota commission; O. E. Sweet, legal coun- H. Boylan, special counsellor Iowa railroad commission; John F,. Hogan, mission; Frank H. Funk, Illinois pub- lic service commissione: B. Bee, rate expert, Missouri_public service commission; Thomas Yapp, secretary Minnesota railroad and warehouse commission; George A. Wells, secre- tary |Western Grain Dealers’ associa tion, Des Moines, Ia.; Homer V. Price manager Farmers’ Elevator Co., De laven, Ill.; Clifford Thorne, general counsel National committee of farm- ers’ cooperative elevators, Chicago, W.; William R: Bach, attorney Mlinois State Grain Dealers’ association, Bloomington, Hl.; Robert E. Quirk, in- terstate commerce commission, BUY W.> 3 —— No, 0. E. S. Meetings. No meetings of Bismarck chapter, Eastern Star, will be held until further notice because of the influenza. Ruud to Fort Riley. . ‘Dr. H.’O, Rudd of Roan, Strauss & Fisher's offices, left Saturday for Fort Riley, Kans., to report for a captain's commission, > Has Influenza. G. F, Dollar, who was to have en- trained for Fort, Winfield Scott with the nexf draft contingent, is confined to his home by a severe attack of in- fluenza. — isi SECOND COOK V TED—(Single woman) at the Bismarck hospital. 10 14 3t BUY W. 5. S. Optimistic Thought. : No gain is so certaiti as that wh! druggist, on fous. counts, charging the maintenance of-a common ‘nuisance, e have suits in‘ stock, so here it goes to CLEAN THEM UP. Suits values sale price . Suits values sale price . § Coats. sale Coats, Coats, sale sale Coats, Coats. sale Coats, sale at. sale Sweeping Sale Price Is sayg@ from-the economical use of what we have. . EXTRAORDINARY TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY Coats and Suits Un only a few of up to $59.50, - $35.00 up to $89.50, vee B42.50 $16.50 $22.50 $32.50 | $35.00 $27.50 $39.50 to ric Spe all price price price price price 49c THIS SALE IS No Refunds; No sellor South Dakota commission; ,T. | tariff clerk Wisconsin railway com- | ich | your fall and winter supply Sweeping Sale Prices, 10 per cent discount. \ Always - come to Johnson’s for Real BARGAINS AT ALL TIMES. Petticoats- Sipe wan $4.98. BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE STAY AT HOME: DON'T EXPOSE SELF TO “FLU” City Health Officer Strauss Ic- sues Instructions to the Public. | EPIDEMIC UNDER CONTROL | Stay,at home; don’t go down town unless you have urgent business there; keep off the streets; don’t congregate in stores or on the sidewalks; if you are coughing or sneezing, wear 2 mask; if you are compelled to be with others who are coughing or sneezing, wear a mask. . These are some of the instructions td the public issued today by’ City Health Officer Strauss. ¢ “We have the epidemic under con- trol. Its spread is checked. What we need now to stamp it out is the active ! cooperation of every man, women and child,” said Dr. Strauss this morning. “There are about 400 cases of Span- lish influenza in Bismarck. The num- ber of new cases reported this morn- ing was comparatively small. , The at- tacks, however, appear to be gaining in severity as they decrease in num- |ber. This is, a time when everyone |, i must cooperate with the health depart- ment; all of us must obey orders. We must safeguard not our own. health; alone, but have consideration for oth- ers. We have this outbreak under ‘control, and if everyone does as they) are told and helps to the utmost we will soon have the epidemic on the! Commends Red Cross. “In connection with the preventive work which is being. done, I wish especially to commend the Bismarck Red Cross for its “splendid coopera-| tion,” said Dr. Strauss this morning. |! “The local chapter /has been of the} very greatest assistance in the mak- ing of m: s and ‘in o,her ways, and | ‘this organization has once more dem-| onstrated its high value to the com- munity.” How to Check it. Here are some ,suggestions which ; Dr. Strauss urges the public to heed: KEEP, AWAY FROM ANY SICK PERSON, ESPECIALLY THOSE WHO COUGH OR SNEEZZE. DO NOT HANDLE ARTICLES WHICH OTHERS HAVE HANDLED. WASH HANDS WELL BEFORE! EATING. i | IF ILL, ISOLATE YOURSELF. COVER YOUR MOUTH AND NOSE| WHEN SNEEZZING OR COUGHING. KEEP YOUK TBHETH CLEAN. Sweeping Sale on derwear | Now is the time to buy underwear at prices that you cannot afford to pass up. We carried over enough underwear from last season run us through this sea- son where the price today has more than doubled. but we are still selling this at last year’s prices. Even at that we are going to place of our underwear at Oil per FOR STRICTLY CASH Exchanges; No Approvals We \endanger their own health and, that Comforters at .......-.. r Yarn at, per skein...... Petticoats—Sweepnig Sale—Values up to $6.75 at. 6... 2 ceed ok) $4.98 Pillows at 10 per cent discount. Pillow Tubing at 10 per cent discount. White goods at 10 per cent discount. great GARGLE SEVERAL TIMES pDaILy | WITH A GOOD ANTISEPTIC AND USE: A NASAL SPRAY. KEEP YOUR WINDOWS uUPEN. WEAR MASKS WHEN AROUND THOSE WHO ARE SICK OR WHO! COUGH OR SNEEZE. Public Precautions. Precautions which Dr. Strauss has ordered enforced for the protection of | the general’ public are as follows: | Taxicabs fust be kept clean and) windows must be open. | All engaged in handling food must} wear masks and must keep hands and } garments in thoroughly sanitary con- dition. Q may. be obtained from the! office of Dr. Strauss or at the Red Cross rooms.) Citizens are not to assemble on the streets or elsewhere, Special police have been detailéd | iwth instructions ‘o keep the people! moving. These orders must be obeyed. Police havé instructions to immediate- ly arrest any citizen declining to com- ply, “Anyone with the interest’ of the community at heart will obey these simple regulations without question,” said Health Officer Strauss. today. “Those who will not obey will be ar- rested and ‘placed where they cannot of their neighbors. Any business es- tablishment which unnecessarily per- mits persons to congregate, must be closed. This is not a time for half- Way measures.” By Federal Orders. “By order of the national, govern- ment as well as local authorities, peo- ple must not. congregate on the streets,” announced Chief ‘of Police Martineson today. “People can have no business on the streets in the even- ing when the stores are closed, and they must remain at home on their] own premises. I have a corps’ of ex- tra police on duty. with instructions to arrest. and imprison any persons found loitering or congregating.” Wearing Masks. Waitresses in local hotels and cafes, girls at the delivery windows in the} postoffice. and in other public places | in Bismarck today are wearing masks tor protection, It is probable that the adopiion of this precaution will be-| come general. Masks may be obtained from Dr. Strauss or at the, Red Cros: rooms ‘“ithout charge. RU W. 5. 8 ——— ILLINOIS MAN TO HEAD STATE NORMAL SCHOOL) tJarlos’K. Allen, vice president of the Southern Tllinois state univers- ity and nommal school at Carbondale, ML, has definitely accepted the pres- idency of the Valley City state normal to succeed Dr. G. “arland, for S8 years head of this institution. Dr. Allen will assume his new duties about November 1, For the last five years > MANY: SELECTS sey, Rolette, Towner, Bottineau, Pierce, McHvnry and Eddy counties. | No, 4 takes 442 men over the Northern SPANISHFLU.. HITS DAKOTA *** RAILROAD MEN > ron No. 3. | county | Golden Valley 41 at Beach, from which Gi |s Up Here to Carry Fort Scott Quotas. ja Pullman Accommodations 8. En Route. | Two special trains to be made up in Bismarck will carry, over the North- ern facific approximately 8vu of the z,5v0 men whom Norn Lakota will en-| train beginning next) Moaday cinfluen- za permitting) ror Fort Warield Scott, calif. A third Northern lac pe- cial will be made up at Fargo. Great Northern special trains will ve made up at Minot and Grand ro f The first Northern Pacific sp to leave Lismarck will roll out W nesday evening. October 23, c: 25 trom benson, 28 from Sheridan, 26 | trom Foster, 74 trom Emmons; 63 from Sargent, 28 from Mcintosh 28 from Logan and 77 from McLean. At Man- dan this train will pick up 51 Morton county men. The Emmons county men will entrain over the Northern Pacific at Linton, reaching Bismarck | Sargent, McIntosh and Lo.! gan county men will come in over the} South Soo, reaching, Bismarck at 4:10! p. m4 and the McLean county conting- ent will come in over the North Soo. All Soo line point quotas will have, dinner here. Friday, October 25, a special train wil be made up here, carrying leigh ‘county men when it lea marck. At Mandan Dunn county's 74 men, 36 from Mercer, 12 nm Oliver, 31 trom Hettinger and 79 trom Grant will entrain, At Dickinson 62 Stark! men will come aboard; Bill- ings, will entrain five at Medora and UUUSUUCUOUUEHA point the special runs through to Fort Scott, vii. Butte, Mont., and Ogden, Utah. The journey will consume about four days. LE Hight train schedules have been made up for this, one of the largest movements of seleotive service men North Dakota has made since the be- ginning of the war. Schedule No. 1 dealls for $1 men from Dickey, who travel in lonesbme state, all by them: selves, over the Milwaukee, via Aber- ‘deen. No. 2 takes five from Sioux, 16 from Adams, 21 trom Bowman and 42 he has held his present position at Carbondale. He has a Ph. 0. and an A. M. degree from the University of Chicago. and he took his B. A. at Carleton. Watch Us Grow. October Sw Bargain | Basement | Store Specials Sheeting at 10 per cent discount. cloth at, per yard.... Remnanis at Sweeping Prices. Lonsdale Muslin, sweeping sale price, yard ig.’ Ee es 2. Cheese Cloth, sweeping sale price, per yard Cotton yar Fruit price, per yard . Enamelware az . Challies, sweeping sale price, Values. Splendid Regular 59c grade towels, sweeping sale: price .. one nice big" are*going to’place of bath robes, values up to $8.75 on this it Sweeping Sale at . ‘ BISMARCK’S FASTEST GROWING STORE .- JOHN This is the Home for Suits. of the.Loom Muslin, sweeping: sale $5.98 : Cee eee UE UEEE EEE EEESESEEEEEEEEREEEEEEEE from. Slope. a total of 84, traveling jover the Milwaukee calls for i454 men to entrain ové¥ the Great | Northern, from Richland, Steele, Ram- WILL ENTRAIN | Pacific from Ransom. LaMoure, Cass, | 1 la . | counti which’ includes Soo ‘i ss counties. No, IN BISMARCK line points and Morton county's ti thern Pacific, and No. 6 takes over the +—_ . of Fi Wells, Two Special Trains to be Made | trait, McKenzie and Williams counties. | ern Pacific at Jamestown advises that Northern Pacific territory from Bur-}neers, 18 trainmen, four train dispatch: leigh west to the state line, | Morton county, will take 432 x of 7 ~ q { Trail, BOYS TRAVEL IN STAT Grand Forks and Nelson counties, to — en mo A . i Will See Fine Scenery and Have |.) | Butte to Ogden and thence over the scenic section of North America. All| new ordinance requiring taxi drivers of the trains will carry diners, serving ‘all meals en route. Brnes, Griggs, Stutsman and Kidder | Spanish ‘influenza has hit North Da- kota railroads,hard. - In response to an inquiry from the state railway com- inission as to why the Maddock Farm- reat Northern 430 men from Renville, | ers’ Elevator Co. was not getting more Moun- | cars, Supt. W. E. Berner of the North- con- ngent, carries 400 men over the Nor- Ward, Burke, Divide, chedule No. 7, which covers all the | his company at that point has.25 engi- cepting |ers and 10 operators on the sick list, lects,|due to the epidemic. “We have been unaple to run all the trains which the says. the superin- nd schedule No. 8 calls for 477 from Cavalier, Pembina, Walsh,| business demands, | tendent. BUY W, 8, 8.——— VIOLATES TAXI ORDINANCE. Walter Jenkins pleaded guilty in po- through the most|lice court today to a violation of the / ‘ain on the Great Northern. | These select service men will trav-| via the Oregon Short Line from | jouthern Pacific to procure a license, paid the costs of the erste and bought a te” YOUR PRESCRIPTION and drug store needs will get careful and immediate attention at. COWAN’S DRUC. STORE Instruct your Doctor to le ve his orders with us. UCSC UUURUOUNNOUNEUOUOGED SS AUVENVOSANNUSDNUDDAOEOUULUAEEOOGOEOOIIDINTL SS ANONUAAUNUOUUAUOOODAGOUDOCCUGROUCUACOAEAUUSHONOGUROGHUQEULUCCUCEHOOOCOEAUUAOEOUUOOONOONOGL Send Him Your Picture (oe The war department Mf says you can send the i, “A i OUOURSEOUOUADEUOUOUOUET boys photographs if they are limited in size and weight so they go as let- ter mail. The big idea of the hour is to send men “over there. We can make your picture for overseas small in and weight, but fairly teeming z with quality. The larger i es of the men “over there” will make admir- able Christmas gifts for relatives and friends over here, HOLMBOE PHOTOGRAPH. STUDIO UNNGGNUAEOOUNSUNGDOUGUUOUAESUCAUUGUGUUOUCUCOONOUULOEOUOCOUSHOCUDEDOOCUNOGUUOCUCOUONUHOCHOOUONOaUuUatE ' SUQDONUEUEANEOUGEOUOUOTOOUOUOOECGOUEONOGUOEONOGNOOIOA e As you all know this is Georgette Crepe Waists, and even so we are going to place every store, values up to $6.75 Sweeping Sale, at..... Another lot of Jap silk Percales ......-+--++0-0;5> veces BDC waists, values up to $3.98. Sweeping Outing flannel .... . .19¢ Sale: Price «20k Sea neces. ces $2.00 Romper cloth ..... -35¢ Come and see our Special 98¢ Waists. Ginghams ..... -29¢ Blankets at ..... $5.75 Blankets at 4 * Meer ‘omforters at .... cee ote BB e Comforters at . . $1.98 Hat Values up to $8.50 Sees $5.98 Hat Values up to Se $5.98. Sweeping 8c Sales Price $3.98 per 22¢ 25c 98c_ lot Prices from 1.98 This is the Home for Coats. Sweeping Sale on Georgette Crepe One nice lot of waists. slightly soiled, ‘ values up to $5.98, Sweeping Sale $2.98 We have just unpacked the New TOM-OHAT| The Store with Over 1,000 Garments i S Popular ee Store eping = Children’s School Dresses the home for waist in the at this Great Yess ae $4.98 We have just received a large shipment of children’s school dresses and every one of, them to be placed on sale at Sweeping Prices, 10 per cent discount. and tub silk Sweeping Sale $1.19 to $3.98